Google Bubble Chart with R bubblechart gvisBubbleChart
Source:R/gvisBubbleChart.R
gvisBubbleChart.Rd
The gvisBubbleChart function reads a data.frame and creates text output referring to the Google Visualisation API, which can be included into a web page, or as a stand-alone page.
Usage
gvisBubbleChart(
data,
idvar = "",
xvar = "",
yvar = "",
colorvar = "",
sizevar = "",
options = list(),
chartid
)
Arguments
- data
a
data.frame
to be displayed as a bubble chart. The data has to have at least three columns foridvar, xvar
, andyvar
.- idvar
column name of
data
with the bubble- xvar
column name of a numerical vector in
data
to be plotted on the x-axis.- yvar
column name of a numerical vector in
data
to be plotted on the y-axis.- colorvar
column name of data that identifies bubbles in the same series. Use the same value to identify all bubbles that belong to the same series; bubbles in the same series will be assigned the same color. Series can be configured using the
series
option.- sizevar
values in this column are mapped to actual pixel values using the
sizeAxis
option.- options
list of configuration options, see:
https://developers.google.com/chart/interactive/docs/gallery/bubblechart#Configuration_Options
The parameters can be set via a named list. The parameters have to map those of the Google documentation.
Boolean arguments are set to either
TRUE
orFALSE
, using the R syntax.Google API parameters with a single value and with names that don't include a "." are set like one would do in R, that is
options=list(width=200, height=300)
. Exceptions to this rule are the width and height options forgvisAnnotatedTimeLine
andgvisAnnotationChart
. For those two functions, width and height must be character strings of the format"Xpx"
, whereX
is a number, or"automatic"
. For example,options=list(width="200px", height="300px")
.Google API parameters with names that don't include a ".", but require multivalues are set as a character, wrapped in "[ ]" and separated by commas, e.g.
options=list(colors="['#cbb69d', '#603913', '#c69c6e']")
Google API parameters with names that do include a "." present parameters with several sub-options and have to be set as a character wrapped in "{ }". The values of those sub-options are set via parameter:value. Boolean values have to be stated as
'true'
or'false'
. For example the Google documentaion states the formating options for the vertical axis and states the parameter asvAxis.format
. Then this paramter can be set in R as:options=list(vAxis="\{format:'#,###%'\}")
.If several sub-options have to be set, e.g.
titleTextStyle.color
,titleTextStyle.fontName
andtitleTextStyle.fontSize
, then those can be combined in one list item such as:options=list(titleTextStyle="\{color:'red', fontName:'Courier', fontSize:16\}")
paramters that can have more than one value per sub-options are wrapped in "[ ]". For example to set the labels for left and right axes use:
options=list(vAxes="[\{title:'val1'\}, \{title:'val2'\}]")
gvis.editor
a character label for an on-page button that opens an in-page dialog box enabling users to edit, change and customise the chart. By default no value is given and therefore no button is displayed.
- chartid
character. If missing (default) a random chart id will be generated based on chart type and
tempfile
.
Value
gvisBubbleChart
returns list
of class
"gvis
" and "list
".
An object of class "gvis
" is a list containing at least the
following components:
type
Google visualisation type
chartid
character id of the chart object. Unique chart ids are required to place several charts on the same page.
html
a list with the building blocks for a page
header
a character string of a html page header:
<html>...<body>
,chart
a named character vector of the chart's building blocks:
jsHeader
Opening
<script>
tag and reference to Google's JavaScript library.jsData
JavaScript function defining the input
data
as a JSON object.jsDrawChart
JavaScript function combing the data with the visualisation API and user options.
jsDisplayChart
JavaScript function calling the handler to display the chart.
jsFooter
End tag
</script>
.jsChart
Call of the
jsDisplayChart
function.divChart
<div>
container to embed the chart into the page.
caption
character string of a standard caption, including data name and chart id.
footer
character string of a html page footer:
</body>...</html>
, including the used R and googleVis version and link to Google's Terms of Use.
Details
A bubble chart is used to visualize a data set with 2 to 4 dimensions. The first two dimensions are visualized as coordinates, the 3rd as color and the 4th as size.
The bubble chart is rendered within the browser using SVG or VML and displays tips when hovering over points.
References
Google Chart Tools API: https://developers.google.com/chart/interactive/docs/gallery/bubblechart
See also
See also gvisMotionChart
for a moving bubble chart
over time, and print.gvis
, plot.gvis
for
printing and plotting methods.
Examples
bubble1 <- gvisBubbleChart(Fruits, idvar="Fruit", xvar="Sales", yvar="Expenses")
plot(bubble1)
## Set color and size
bubble2 <- gvisBubbleChart(Fruits, idvar="Fruit", xvar="Sales", yvar="Expenses",
colorvar="Location", sizevar="Profit",
options=list(hAxis='{minValue:75, maxValue:125}'))
plot(bubble2)
## Use year to color the bubbles
bubble3 <- gvisBubbleChart(Fruits, idvar="Fruit", xvar="Sales", yvar="Expenses",
colorvar="Year", sizevar="Profit",
options=list(hAxis='{minValue:75, maxValue:125}'))
plot(bubble3)
## Gradient colour example
bubble4 <- gvisBubbleChart(Fruits, idvar="Fruit", xvar="Sales", yvar="Expenses",
sizevar="Profit",
options=list(hAxis='{minValue:75, maxValue:125}',
colorAxis="{colors: ['lightblue', 'blue']}"))
plot(bubble4)
if (FALSE) {
## Moving bubble chart over time, aka motion chart
M <- gvisMotionChart(Fruits, Fruit, Year)
plot(M)
}